For each file given, GNUstrings prints the
printable character sequences that are at least 4 characters long (or
the number given with the options below) and are followed by an
unprintable character.

Depending upon how the strings program was configured it will default
to either displaying all the printable sequences that it can find in
each file, or only those sequences that are in loadable, initialized
data sections. If the file type in unrecognizable, or if strings is
reading from stdin then it will always display all of the printable
sequences that it can find.

For backwards compatibility any file that occurs after a command line
option of just - will also be scanned in full, regardless of
the presence of any -d option.

strings is mainly useful for determining the contents of
non-text files.

-a

--all

-

Scan the whole file, regardless of what sections it contains or
whether those sections are loaded or initialized. Normally this is
the default behaviour, but strings can be configured so that the
-d is the default instead.

The - option is position dependent and forces strings to
perform full scans of any file that is mentioned after the -
on the command line, even if the -d option has been
specified.

-d

--data

Only print strings from initialized, loaded data sections in the
file. This may reduce the amount of garbage in the output, but it
also exposes the strings program to any security flaws that may be
present in the BFD library used to scan and load sections. Strings
can be configured so that this option is the default behaviour. In
such cases the -a option can be used to avoid using the BFD
library and instead just print all of the strings found in the file.

-f

--print-file-name

Print the name of the file before each string.

--help

Print a summary of the program usage on the standard output and exit.

-min-len

-n min-len

--bytes=min-len

Print sequences of characters that are at least min-len characters
long, instead of the default 4.

-o

Like ‘-t o’. Some other versions of strings have -o
act like ‘-t d’ instead. Since we can not be compatible with both
ways, we simply chose one.

-t radix

--radix=radix

Print the offset within the file before each string. The single
character argument specifies the radix of the offset—‘o’ for
octal, ‘x’ for hexadecimal, or ‘d’ for decimal.

Specify an object code format other than your system’s default format.
See Target Selection, for more information.

-v

-V

--version

Print the program version number on the standard output and exit.

-w

--include-all-whitespace

By default tab and space characters are included in the strings that
are displayed, but other whitespace characters, such a newlines and
carriage returns, are not. The -w option changes this so
that all whitespace characters are considered to be part of a string.

-s

--output-separator

By default, output strings are delimited by a new-line. This option
allows you to supply any string to be used as the output record
separator. Useful with –include-all-whitespace where strings
may contain new-lines internally.